So you think you know "Toy Story"? Well, get ready to prove it, potato head.

Woody and the whole 'Toy Story' gang are the subject of a diabolical new quiz by Shortlist.com.

Shortlist.com has put together a dandy of a quiz on Pixar's flagship franchise. There are 20 questions in all, but be warned - they're tough.

How tough, you ask? Well, Pixar's own Lee Unkrich -- who called the quiz to our attention recently when he referenced it via his Twitter account -- admitted that he got only 12 of 20 correct. For those keeping track at home, that's 60 percent -- for the guy who edited "Toy Story," co-directed "Toy Story 2" and directed "Toy Story 3."

So, yeah, it might be about toys, but this ain't kid stuff. In fact some of these questions are so diabolical they make Zurg look like Bo-Peep.

Still, we can't resist a good quiz. Which is why Shortlist's "Toy Story" head-scratcher tops today's Evening Edition, a regular roundup of recent Hollywood headlines collected from around the web.

The Hollywood Reporter: "Django Unchained" director Quentin Tarantino to be honored at the British Academy of Film and Television Arts Britannia Awards. "Django" hasn't even been publicly screened yet, and it's not set for release until Christmas, but Tarantino's reputation already is already earning him trophies this awards season. Specifically, the director will be given the John Schlesinger Britannia Award for Excellence in Directing at the Britannia Awards on Nov. 11, joining fellow honorees Daniel Craig (who will receive the British Artist of the Year award), "South Park" creators Matt Parker and Trey Stone (Charlie Chaplin Britannia Award for Excellence in Comedy) and video game designer Will Wright (Albert R. Broccoli Britannia Award for Worldwide Contribution to Entertainment). The award show will be broadcast, for the first time, on BBC America at 7 p.m. on Nov. 11 as a two-hour special, preceded by a pre-show special at 6:30 p.m. More honorees will be announced in coming weeks.

Nola.com (embedded video): New "Hobbit" trailer lands. I blogged this one earlier today,
but in case you missed it, you can check it out in the embedded video at
right. "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey" - the first in Peter
Jackson's three-part adaptation of J.R.R. Tolkien's "Lord of the Rings"
prequel - lands in theaters Dec. 14.

Deadline: Lionsgate schedules release date for Dwayne Johnson's Louisiana-shot "Snitch." You can watch for the based-on-real-events thriller - which shot in Shreveport last December - to land in theaters on Feb. 22. In it, Johnson stars as a father who - hoping to save his son from a drug rap - agrees to work as an undercover informant for authorities. Directed by Ric Roman Waugh, it co-stars Barry Pepper and Susan Sarandon. And speaking of Sarandon ...

Indiewire: Complete list of announced 2012 Foreign-Language Academy Award submissions. So far, 32 countries have submitted entries, so the list is far from complete (last year, 61 countries had submitted films for consideration by the deadline). But there's already at least one noteworthy submission: the feel-good French film "The Intouchables." Here, the good folks at Indiewire offer a rundown of all the films hoping to earn a nomination in Oscar's foreign-language category.

NBC.com (embedded video): Joseph Gordon-Levitt promos his "SNL" performance ahead of the release of his NOLA-shot "Looper." As usual, these are cute little spots, but fans of locally shot films will perhaps find them most notable for the plug they provide for Gordon-Levitt's upcoming time-travel actioner, "Looper," which opens in theaters next Friday (Sept. 28). Check out the promos in the embedded video below.